When you think about buying a Super Bowl ticket, it almost feels like a fantasy nowadays.
Each year, it has risen like a stock price, shooting into the heavens, where you might have to take out a loan just to have a chance of going to the NFL title game.
But that has changed in 2026, with the Bay Area Super Bowl between the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks seeing prices crater in recent days.
Per TicketData, a month ago, the get-in price for Super Bowl LX was $6,500. While that number seems ridiculous, it can go even higher depending on which teams make it further in the playoffs, sometimes reaching close to five digits by the ramp-up to the ultimate weekend.
That has not been the case this year.
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Following the AFC and NFC Championship games, in which the Denver Broncos and Los Angeles, respectively, were eliminated from contention, the get-in price has dropped like a stone into the ocean.
A week ago, it was $4,700 to grab a third-party ticket to see Drake Maye take on Sam Darnold for the Lombardi Trophy.
As of Friday night, it is now officially cheaper to get into the Super Bowl than it was to go watch the Indiana Hoosiers take on the Miami Hurricanes in the College Football Playoff national championship.
The price of a get-in ticket has dropped $1,000 to $3,643 in five days, and it could get even lower as we move into the weekend, with the game only a little over 48 hours away.
Neither New England nor Seattle fans have been to a Super Bowl in the past half-decade, but both teams have won a ring in the past 15 years.
In contrast, the Indiana Hoosiers had never come close to playing for a national title, and the Hurricanes were playing at their home stadium, attempting to win a championship for the first time in a quarter-century.
Although there’s still time for Super Bowl LX tickets to rise, right now, there might be a chance you could get into the biggest game of the year for under $3,000 if things continue sliding as they are.